We were promised this super hospital, not just for the city, but for the whole conurbation, because that is what we need. |
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The area adjoins the Dublin conurbation, and is a designated green belt amenity and agricultural resource base. |
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It's likely to be close to a major conurbation with good road and rail links. |
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It is in the roads leading to the city centre and those carrying traffic past the major conurbation. |
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Developers are looking at big cities and Bradford is a large conurbation. |
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Expansion of the Basel conurbation beyond the French and German borders has intensified the need for cross-border planning. |
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And did its citizens hail the newborn giant as a model of development, as in many ways this conurbation has been? |
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This means that all surveyed railway station visitors live in the conurbation in which the railway station is located. |
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This is a conurbation of 2.5m people and we ought to be able to raise sufficient revenue for Metrolink without having to keep going cap in hand to government. |
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These future multimodal hubs are going to change the face of the conurbation. |
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Coasts are not conurbation areas, but nevertheless around one third of the EU population live in coastal regions today. |
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It is the fifth most inhabited conurbation in India, with a population of more than 8 million people. |
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Gliwice is located in a densely populated conurbation, historically marked by high-polluting industrial activities. |
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The Lille conurbation has one million inhabitants and four million live in the region. |
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Manchester is a major city at the heart of a large urban conurbation. |
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On 1st January, Transdev Reims became the new operator of the urban transport network for the conurbation of Reims for a term of 34 years. |
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The Basle trinational conurbation, located at the meeting point of three countries, is a highly diversified space. |
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Urban and suburban services' means transport services meeting the needs of an urban centre or conurbation, and transport needs between it and the surrounding areas. |
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In addition, the EIB advanced EUR 30 million for the construction of a new light metro line in the Tunisian capital extending urban rail services to commuters in the south of the conurbation. |
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It is an industrial and seaport conurbation which has chosen to develop its industrial character in harmony with the people and their environment. |
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Here, it is intended to join with a proposed Luton Northern Bypass to form a northern bypass for the wider conurbation. |
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The historic town of Wellington now makes up part of the Telford conurbation. |
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Most of the conurbation on both sides of the estuary is known as Merseyside. |
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The area of conurbation between Birmingham and Wolverhampton is known as the Black Country. |
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Lincluden Abbey and its grounds are now within the Dumfries urban conurbation boundary. |
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In the 2011 Census, the area so defined had a total population of 325,264, making it the 19th largest conurbation in England and Wales. |
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Bournemouth, the most populous town in the conurbation, was established in the Georgian era when sea bathing became popular. |
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More than half of the county's residents live in the Bournemouth, Poole and Christchurch conurbation. |
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Dorset has two higher education establishments situated in the heart of the county's south east conurbation. |
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It would simplify the overall view of the Basle trinational conurbation, more identifiable for the population and better placed for international outreach. |
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In the case of a large or indeed very large conurbation, certainly the most efficient economically, the social problems come to a head as a result of the tendency for residential mobility to be obstructed. |
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But this classification is no reason for delusions of grandeur. After all, whether a conurbation is a thriving region or one whose future is already behind it can only be answered at local level. |
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For instance, a goods train passing though heavily congested urban areas might have to pay charges to the infrastructure manager whereas a lorry can pass through an entire conurbation without paying any road charges. |
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There is also a risk that the central city will grab all the profits made from the events to the detriment of other cities in the conurbation or region. |
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Yet the down-at-heel conurbation enjoys one institutional advantage. |
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They want to create a health and wellbeing board, made up of NHS and local-government representatives, to administer a single budget for the conurbation. |
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Moreover, it considered appropriate to include a text ensuring that airports serving the same city or conurbation can share a common charging system. |
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Its proposal for the West Midlands conurbation preferred instead an area of contiguous county boroughs with no overall metropolitan authority. |
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The City as a distinct polity survived despite its position within the London conurbation and numerous local government reforms. |
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In some cases, the area holding city status does not coincide with the built up area or conurbation of which it forms part. |
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These holding areas lie to the northwest, northeast, southeast and southwest of the London conurbation. |
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Formerly a primarily industrial conurbation, it is now a centre for service industries and distribution centres. |
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The Torbay conurbation of Torquay, Paignton and Brixham on the south coast is now administratively independent of the county. |
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Fareham, Gosport and Havant have grown into a conurbation that stretches along the coast between the two main cities. |
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It is bounded by the Greater Manchester conurbation in the west and the Yorkshire Dales to the north. |
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In the 1910s, local government reforms to administer this conurbation as a single entity were proposed. |
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In 1951, the census in the UK began reporting on South East Lancashire as a homogeneous conurbation. |
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The European Union designate the conurbation as a single homogonous urban city region. |
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The conurbation has a population of about 650,000, though less than half live within the city boundaries. |
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Completely encircling the Nottingham conurbation, it stretches for several miles into the surrounding districts, and extends into Derbyshire. |
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The vision is to reinvent the central Manchester conurbation as the major waterfront destination in Northern England. |
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Anyone would think Mancunians came from Renaissance Florence or imperial Angor Wat rather than a rather dirty, crime-infested conurbation. |
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They want to form a new-style metropolis out of the community of 53 cities in the west German Ruhr region, the third largest conurbation in Europe. |
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What it does affects the whole conurbation more than the work of any other council. |
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With the new partners, the Austrian company aims at expanding its presence to the whole country, with a focus on conurbation areas. |
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If this carries on we'll end up with a sprawling conurbation from Warwick up to Nuneaton and across to Solihull. |
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The biggest loser in terms of absolute numbers was the West Midlands conurbation, with net outward movement of around 10,000 annually. |
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Protect the downstream Woclaw conurbation as the Nysa is the main tributary to the Upper Odra. |
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Settlements closer to London are part of the conurbation known as the Greater London Urban Area. |
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Leicester is the largest city in the region, whilst the Nottingham Urban Area is its largest urban conurbation. |
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Numerous notable roads pass through the region, with most converging around the central conurbation. |
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This is in large part due to the West Midlands conurbation, which is highly diverse. |
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Despite this, Greater London is commonly regarded as a city in the general senses of a conurbation and a municipality. |
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Le Havre is the most populous commune of Upper Normandy, although the total population of the greater Le Havre conurbation is smaller than that of Rouen. |
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The two conurbations are close enough to be a single conurbation. |
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The conurbation of Pembroke Dock and Pembroke has a combined population of 15,890 and as such is one of the major population centres of West Wales. |
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The region is geographically diverse, from the urban central areas of the conurbation to the rural western counties of Shropshire and Herefordshire which border Wales. |
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This was a proposal to link Piccadilly and Victoria stations via a tunnel under the city centre and enable train services to run across the Manchester conurbation. |
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The axe on ring-and-ride is being wielded because the seven district councils in the conurbation have had to rein in spending because of central government cuts. |
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For purposes of the Office for National Statistics, it forms the fifth largest settlement of the Greater Manchester Urban Area, the United Kingdom's third largest conurbation. |
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The north of the county is predominantly rural and sparsely populated, except for the towns of Lancaster and Morecambe which form a large conurbation of almost 100,000 people. |
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The A337 road links Lymington to Lyndhurst and the M27 motorway to the north, and to New Milton and the South East Dorset conurbation to the west. |
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Around half of the population lives in the South East Dorset conurbation, while the rest of the county is largely rural with a low population density. |
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The people who oppose developement in Keresley are not NIMBYS but are trying to protect what green fields we have and prevent us from becoming another conurbation. |
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Brussels is also part of a large conurbation which extends between Brussels, Antwerp, Ghent, Leuven and Walloon Brabant and is home to over 5 million people. |
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Manchester is fringed by the Cheshire Plain to the south, the Pennines to the north and east and an arc of towns with which it forms a continuous conurbation. |
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Coventry is separated from the West Midlands conurbation by the Meriden Gap, and other urban areas, such as Cannock and Codsall are also only narrowly avoided. |
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The city of Coventry is also located within the West Midlands county, but is separated from the conurbation to the west by several miles of green belt. |
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